Inside our latest issue
How Gen X changed the culture forever.
T Magazine
December 6, 2025
An illustration and animation from “The Simpsons" featuring Bart Simpson as well as famous characters from pop culture such as Neo from “The Matrix,” Lydia from “Beetlejuice” and Tyler Durden from “Fight Club.”
Illustration and animation by David Silverman. The Simpsons™ and © 2025 20th Television

How Gen X are you? Can you identify all of the figures above? Click here to take a closer look at the issue’s three covers, two by David Silverman of “The Simpsons” and another by the artist and writer Chris Ware.

GEN X

A group portrait in front of red school lockers with a red carpet in front.

Neal Slavin

Gen X

Is Gen X Actually the Greatest Generation?

How one era changed everything about the culture — and why we’re so nostalgic for its creations.

By Amanda Fortini and Neal Slavin

A still from "Daria," showing Jane and Daria sitting at school desks.

AJ Pics/Alamy

GeN X

How the Animated Sitcom and Gen X Grew Up Together

From “The Simpsons” to “Daria,” the cohort saw cartoons transformed into an art form.

By James Poniewozik

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Gen X

Whatever: A Gen X Glossary

“Androgyny,” “apathy” and other words and ideas that defined America’s last monoculture.

By Alexandra Jacobs

ART & CULTURE

A painting of a sleeping man with a woman kneeling over him, holding a nail to his head with her left hand a raised hammer in her right.

Collection of Szepmuveszeti Muzeum, Budapest. HIP/Art Resource, N.Y.

How to Get Revenge

From Washington to Hollywood, American culture is now defined by score settling. But what do centuries of feuding have to teach us about getting even?

By Mark Harris, M.H. Miller and Minju Pak

Hurvin Anderson sits on a white chair with tall metal legs in a studio space. At right is a yellow ladder. Behind him is a painting featuring strokes of different shades of gree.

Siân Davey

The Art of Britain’s Windrush Generation Has Never Felt More Relevant

At a time of rising xenophobia and nativism, their work examines the meeting of different cultures, and their own right to belong.

By Aatish Taseer

A black-and-white portrait of Rose Byrne and Sheila Heti smiling and looking into the camera.

Heather Sten

admiration society

Rose Byrne and Sheila Heti on Parenting, A.I. and the Nature of Personality

The “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You” actor and the author of “Alphabetical Diaries” met for a wide-ranging conversation.

By Kate Guadagnino

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In the Air

Judging by the Arts Scene, the Circus Is Back in Town

Across the culture, we’re seeing a resurgence of clowns, tents and more.

By Kate Guadagnino

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Jacob Sutton

A Forensic Artist Brings Karl Ove Knausgaard’s New Character to Life

The pair work together to envision Kristian Hadeland, the protagonist of the author’s latest novel, “The School of Night.”

By Jenny Comita

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From left: Emma McIntyre/Getty Images; Robin Marchant/Getty Images

Jodie Foster Takes the Mel Brooks Questionnaire

The comedy legend devised a personality test for us. Our latest respondent: the star of the French-language mystery film “A Private Life,” which premieres in France this week and in the US in January.

DESIGN AND INTERIORS

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Tiphaine Caro

By Design

A Hunting Chateau That’s Luxurious, Restrained and a Little Bit Goth

In a region of France known for both sports and more social pursuits, an Austrian designer brought her signature austere elegance to a classic estate.

By Alice Cavanagh and Tiphaine Caro

A living room with a curved staircase in the background and floor-to-ceiling windows with a white curtain with yellow stripes. In the foreground, a long white couch facing a coffee table of stacked white bricks and a pair of dark green chairs.

Photograph by Simon Watson. Artworks on wall, from left: Thomas Ruff, “Tableau Chinois 18,” 2020 © 2025 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/VG Bild-kunst, Bonn; Anish Kapoor, “Untitled,” 1996 © Anish Kapoor. All rights reserved, Dacs, London/ARS, NY 2025

When Luca Guadagnino Brought Brazilian Modernism to Milan

High above the cloistered, elegant city, the director turned a friend’s apartment into a moody and tropical oasis.

By Guy Trebay and Simon Watson

A living area with brick walls, floor-to-ceiling curtains, and a sofa against the wall, with a circular coffee table in the center surrounded by cushions. By the window, a piano with a bust on a plinth behind it.

David Chow

Home and Work

A SoHo Loft That Reflects an Expansive Idea of Home

In furnishing his own apartment, Gabriel Hendifar created a place where generations and cultures converge.

By Nick Haramis

FOOD

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Monica Jo/Pour Sport Coffee

People, Places, Things

A Dessert That’s ‘a Product of Modern Hedonism’

New spins on mille-feuille and affogato, plus studded accessories and more from T Magazine’s cultural compendium.

A model of a small house with pink candy floss smoke billowing from the chimney, next to clouds of candy floss.

Photograph by Mari Maeda and Yuji Oboshi. Set design by Rachel Mannello

Making It

How Cotton Candy Won Over the Adults

Long associated with childhood and county fairs, the food has found its place among a new generation of experimental chefs.

By Lauren Joseph and Mari Maeda and Yuji Oboshi

FASHION

Two models sit on a white metal bench in a snowy field, their knees angled toward each other. Both have short, slicked-down hair and are wearing white shirts with black jackets and shoes. The model on the left wears ablack dress with buttons; the model on the right wears a black skirt.

Photograph by Julien Martinez Leclerc. Styled by Vanessa Reid

Elegant, Unfussy Holiday Fashion

This season is all about ease, with refined, high-contrast looks that are free of adornment.

By Julien Martinez Leclerc and Vanessa Reid

Two models reclining on a beach at night, wearing, from left, a soccer jacket and patent black leather pants; and a fuschia turtleneck, black gloves and patent brown leather pants.

Photograph by Kwabena Sekyi Appiah-nti. Styled by Delphine Danhier

In Fashion

This Season, Even Sportswear Can Be Festive

Pops of vibrant color enliven and unite athletic pieces and classic men’s tailoring.

By Kwabena Sekyi Appiah-nti and Delphine Danhier

From left: cascading earrings with teardrop shaped emeralds; a necklace in the shape of a lizard; and a brooch in the shape of a dragonfly, all displayed on a stalk of Brussels sprouts.

Photograph by Anthony Cotsifas. Set design by Martin Bourne. Jewelry editor: Jaclyn Bloomfield

objects

Jewelry That Transports You to the Natural World

Emeralds, perhaps more than any other stone, are a perfect fit for flora- and fauna-inspired statement pieces.

By Anthony Cotsifas

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Courtesy of the brands

Market Report

The Prettiest Holiday Shoes Come With Bows on Top

Fancy ribbons add charm to these party accessories.

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